I got a great Hulk sketch from Gabriel and he gave very generously of his time to talk about the new Hulk series he is working on and the (sadly) now cancelled Atlas series.

This sketch is interestingly a try out sketch he did for Marvel when they were thinking about offering him the Hulk gig. Personally I think the Hulk comics needed a bit of depth to them after the Jeff Loeb run which to me seemed more about splash pages and surprise endings. Gabriel joined up once more with Jeff Parker from Hulk issue 25 onwards (don't be put off by the Ed McGuinness Jr cover the interiors are all by Hardman).

The issue has a reall Sci-Fi feel to it where Steve Rogers recruits the Red Hulk from captivity to fight a plague of super mutants. The beats of the story have Rogers visit Red Hulk in his cell and initially refuse freeing him because he has the wrong attitude (a great touch). He is eventually freed and sent to defeat a mutant techno virus force of ever growing monsters.

The art has a slightly old school pulpy style to it and I can read a lot of John Buscema and 1970s Marvel influences brought up to date. The look of the book fits right in with the current phoenix from the ashes feel of the Marvel Universe at the moment as they scrabble out from under the heel of Hammer and the Dark Reign storylines. It is well worth a look if you have fallen off the Hulk bandwagon (as I was about to do).

Sunday, 3 October 2010

It is my intention to keep this comics centric. (No crap movie rumour news or scandalous stories of industry pros in the lift with willing females!)

As a first post about comics on my new blog this comes with a stack of enthusiasm. Not just the thrill of writing a load of crap down for bored comic nerds to read on the interweb but also because of an added rush about bronze age comics. And fuck it just comics in general. It has never been better for readers of the medium. Now if only the sales were better!

Last week I bought a stack of Marvel bronze age Sword and Sorcery titles from a dealer buddy who has recently come into a really interesting Marvel run . (Dead Universe Comics, look them up on Facebook).﻿ Most of the stuff were Conan the Barbarian and King Conan missing issues but a short Creatures On TheLoose run caught my eye from 1971 onwards. (specifically numbers 16 - 29).

Issue 16 begins with an adaption of the 1905 novel 'Lieutenant Gullivar Jones: His Vacation' written by Edwin Lester Arnold. It is the story of Gullivar Jones who manages to get magically transported to the planet Mars. Upon arriving he discovers incredible 'Spidey' level strength and agility and wears a medalion that allows for translation and later in the series strange dreams and halucinations. He encounters a Princess with golden skin called Heru, a birdman mutant ally called Chak and a Red Skinned warlord called Ar Hap.

Before you jump to snarky fan boy conclusions this novel predates anything by Edgar Rice Burroughs and is considered an influence (it would have to be wouldn't it) on the John Carter series of novels. I have checked and the book is still in print even available on the Kindle. Encouraging for a book that when initially for sale got only a lukewarm reception.

For the comic adaption it is beautifully handled by Roy Thomas (writer) and Gil Kane and Bill Everett (artists). They handle the book until issues 20 and 21 (the last couple) when George Alec Effinger (writer) and Gray Morrow (artist) take over.

The story really zips along and nobody could accuse it of current comics decompression (Gullivar has to fight the King's champion in issue 20 and it only takes one panel - genuinely!) I would encouarge anyone who likes pulp fantasy in a Robert E Howard/ERB style to pick it up. Just be warned that you won't get a full issue and there are some 1950s filler / monster / horor stories as back ups.